And Of Course, Canada Gets Its New Anti-Camcording Bill

from the you-saw-that-coming,-didn't-you? dept

Since the beginning of the year, we've seen news story after news story about how Canada supposedly had a huge camcording problem, with people apparently making unauthorized copies of movies for sale after taping them with a camcorder in the theater. This left out a few important things. First, camcording is increasingly a minor problem for movie studios, as the copies you see online and on counterfeit DVDs are more often leaked from studio prints or early released DVDs, rather than the weak quality camcorded versions, complete with audience coughing and heads blocking the bottom of the picture. Second, the numbers the industry kept claiming didn't add up, and the MPAA refused to provide any proof for the numbers they kept claiming about the problem (and those numbers kept changing). In fact, Canadian politicians have said they've relied on these questionable numbers rather than asking for any independent studies. Third, the press and the MPAA almost entirely ignored the laws in Canada that already made it illegal to tape movies. Fourth, the US had stronger laws passed already, and there's no evidence that it's done anything to decrease incidents of camcording. Of course, why let facts get in the way of a few lobbyists and campaign contributions? As expected, Canadian politicians have introduced a much stricter anti-camcording bill that will include jail time (two to five years) for those caught camcording. Michael Geist notes that the bill is on the "fast track" and may not even have any debate before being approved. This seems clearly a case of politicians bowing down to corporate interests (even those outside their own country). No, there's no defense for camcording a movie -- but if it's not a huge problem and existing laws can handle it, why waste government, law enforcement and judicial time and money over what's really a corporate problem?

Way to go.

If Candians want to ban the lower quality crap getting onto the torrent site, then that is awewsome, Now when I find a movie not released on DVD yet, I know it will be the high quality that some guy stole from under the studio's noses. I think those Canadian Politions are brighter then people think. They are doing us a favour and the MPAA is congradulating them. LOL. STUPID MPAA. Mike argues this as its a bad thing. Its actually great.

Shakeycams?

Jeez, people on this list don't seem to have watched a telesync lately, or have bought a bootlegged movie on DVD a few days after its premiere. Cams (and their telesync derivatives) are more likely to be high-quality releases than the shakeycams of yore. And they still dominate the early days of a bootlegged movie. Leaks from studios/post houses prior to a movie's opening are increasingly rare, in sharp contrast to the situation a few years ago. DVD rips don't appear for the first month or two after a movie hits theaters. Whether Canada needs a law against camming is a separate question, but you can't reasonably argue that a) cams are garbage; b) cams are infrequent; or c) there's any real justification for allowing people to camcord a movie in a theater.

Re: Future prison conversation

Prisoner #1: How long you in for?
Prisoner #2: Life!! How long you in?
Prisoner #1: 5 years for rape. What did you do?
Prisoner #2: Camcording a movie at the local cinema.
Prisoner #1: Bummer. You know I hate those goddamn shaky cam movies. What did you use to record the movie?
Prisoner #2: My cellphone.
Prisoner #1: I thought as much, you know what that calls for, right?
Prisoner #2: No?
Prisoner #1: Assrape.
Prisoner #2: *sob*

This has little with the financial damage of poor quality camcorder copies made in Canada. It has everything to do with business strategy. On Hollywood side, it has to bring Canada in line with anti-camcorder laws similar to US, a criminal offense, in order to have any credibility to fight the real damages in Asia and E European countries. On Canada side, there is every expectation of Hollywood making a lot more movies in Canada, and complain less about the tax breaks Canada gives to such enterprise. Politicians are not all dumbs you know.

So VeryLame its just movies jeeze

ok so people copy movies in theaters big deal .. How many people watch them more then i can count in fact i can see more then 60 million people around the world are downloading a new movie right now from the net weather its a cam or a promotional dvd copy . but the real question is how many people are doing the exact opiset of that and wasting there hard earned money on going to the theater to pay a major over price to watch a movie on the big screen for example i would go to the theater spnd 8.50 on a ticket 12 bucks on popcorn and a drink to sit down in a dirty theater with sticky floors ... OR Download the movie burn it to dvd plug in to dvd player a few cents for a dvd 25c for a microwave bag of popcorn we have movie night for family and friends i dont know about the rest of you but i think that movie piracy is the biggest form of entertainment available on the current market as for the people making money off of it try charging a lil bit less for your copies after all you only have to sell one copy to make money after that everything is just profit ..... As for me a pirated movie is the same thing to me as if i recorded the ovie off of tv so you people who want to stop piracy better stop recordings off of tv as well because piracy is piracy other then that leave the pirates alone they will all get caught eventually till then mind your own business